Edwards Bros. v. Bilbo

103 So. 209, 138 Miss. 484, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 38
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1925
DocketNo. 24777.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 103 So. 209 (Edwards Bros. v. Bilbo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards Bros. v. Bilbo, 103 So. 209, 138 Miss. 484, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 38 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Holden, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee, T. D. Bilbo, secured an injunction restraining the1 sheriff of Pearl River county from selling certain land under an execution issued upon a decree against appellee and Edwards Bros., appellant, and in favor of the Merchants’ Bank of Hancock County, the bill alleging that the execution was void because the clerk who issued it failed to “indorse thereon that it was issued for the use of the surety.” Edwards Bros, appellant, who paid the judgment or decree under section 3735, Code of 1906 (Hemingway’s Code, section 2911); and the bill further alleging that the land levied on was part of the homestead of appellee, Bilbo, and that the attempted allotment of his homestead under section 2152, Code of 1906 (section 1827, Hemingway’s Code), was void; and also that appellee, Bilbo, had a claim of nine hundred dollars against Edwards Bros., whom the bill alleged were the owners of the decree against appellee, and that the nine hundred dollars should be allowed as a set-off against Edwards Bros., execution creditor.

The appellant, Edwards Bros., demurred to the bill upon several grounds, but the chancellor overruled the demurrer on the specific point, as recited in his written opinion herein, that the allotment of the homestead to the appellee, Bilbo, was void because the sheriff in attempting to carry out the proceeding under the allotment statute (section 2152, Code of 1906; section 1827, *492 Hemingway’s Code), selected as one of the freeholders to make the allotment, one Gipson, an appraiser, whom the plaintiff in execution had already selected.

. To put it in different words, the chancellor held that when the defendant in execution failed to select a freeholder to represent him in the allotment, then the sheriff should not have selected said Gipson as one of the three freeholders, because he had been selected -by the plaintiff in execution, that is to say, that .the sheriff should have selected three freeholder appraisers to make the allotment none of whom had been previously chosen by either of the parties to the execution.

A brief history of the case is necessary to an understanding of the decision. In May, 1922, the appellee, Bilbo, purchased a Fordson tractor and an Oliver disc plow, for which he executed several promissory notes with lien retained therein. Edwards Bros., appellant, indorsed the two promissory notes, and, when Bilbo failed to pay the notes, the Merchants’ Bank of Bay St. Louis filed suit in the chancery court to recover against the maker and indorser on the notes, and to condemn the machinery to sale, and the proceeds-to be applied on payment of the notes. There was a decree in favor of the bank against Bilbo and the surety, Edwards Bros., the machinery was sold and the proceeds applied to the payment of the two notes, and a decree over against Bilbo and-Edwards Bros.', in the sum of about eight hundred dollars was rendered. There is no complaint as to the regularity or validity of the proceedings up to this point.

Afterwards the execution complained of in. the present suit was issued by the clerk to recover the balance due by Bilbo on the decree against him.. It is alleged in the bill, though the exhibits thereto seem to show otherwise, that the surety, Edwards Bros, had satisfied the judgment against them by paying the amount to the Merchants’ Bank and had the execution issued against the appellee. The execution was issued in the name of the Merchants’ Bank, and-if Edwards Bros, paid the decree *493 and had the execution issued thereon, the record does not disclose that the proper affidavit by them was filed, nor did the clerk indorse thereon that it was issued for the use of the surety, who paid the decree- as provided in the said section 3735, Code of 1906 (section 2911, Hemingway’s Code). The appellee therefore contends that the execution was void for this reason.

When the execution was issued against appellee, Bilbo, the sheriff levied upon the whole land occupied by Bilbo as a homestead, and, acting under the said allotment statute (section 2152, Code of 1906; section 1827, Hemingway’s Code), notified both the defendant and the plaintiff “each to select one householder or freeholder” to appear at an appointed time and set off to the defendant, Bilbo, a portion of the land embracing the dwelling house and the outhouses as the exempt homestead and the part so allotted to be dismissed from execution.

At the appointed time the freeholder selected as appraiser by the plaintiff was present but the defendant, Bilbo, who was also present, failed and refused to select a freeholder appraiser to represent him in the allotment. Thereupon the sheriff, in pursuance of the directions of the statute, selected three freeholders,, one of whom was the freeholder Gipson, selected by the plaintiff. The three freeholders so selected were duly sworn and proceeded to make the appraisement and allotment, and the land which Bilbo was entitled to as' a homestead was allotted to him, and the other land separated from the homestead was held under the execution. And appellee contends that the allottment was void under the statute because the sheriff selected said Gipson whom the plaintiff had already chosen to represent him as appraiser in the allotment, and the chancellor overruled the demurrer upon this ground.

The appellee, Bilbo, had been duly notified to be present on the occasion of the allotment, and was there in person but made no objection to the proceedings; nor did he make any affidavit, after the allotment and before the *494 vendi. was issued, that lie was dissatisfied with the allotment or that he believed it was incorrect or unfair, which would have entitled him to a suspension of the sale until an issue could be made up on the affidavit, and a trial had thereon, and a decision rendered upon' the merits of the affidavit, all of which is provided for in section 2155, Code of 1906 (section 1830, Hemingway’s Code).

We think, from the allegations and exhibits of the bill, the execution levied by the sheriff was valid under the statute. It was levied in the name of the complainant in the decree, the Merchants Bank, as provided by the statute, and upon its face is valid regardless of whether the surety, Edwards Bros., had satisfied the Merchants’ Bank and become the owner of the decree; and the fact, that the clerk issuing the execution failed to indorse thereon that it was issued for the use of the surety, did not vitiate the process, and would only affect it, if at all, to the extent of making it voidable, which irregularity could have been reached by the proper motion, or could have been raised by the defendant on a hearing upon the return of the execution.

If the clerk issued the execution for the use of the surety it will be presumed, in the absence of proof to the contrary, that he acted in pursuance 'of his duty in the premises, and the failure to indorse the writ as mentioned above did not invalidate it. The defect, if it is such, should have been raised and corrected in the regular way after the return of the sheriff under the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
103 So. 209, 138 Miss. 484, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-bros-v-bilbo-miss-1925.